Using the legal powers of "discovery," an attorney in an
ongoing conspiracy trial in Utah has obtained an
affidavit from Terry Nichols, co-conspirator with Tim
McVeigh in the OKC bombing, that says a high-ranking FBI
official was directing McVeigh in the OKC bombing.

Pamela Manson of the Salt Lake Tribune tells what we
know to date [my comments in brackets]: "The [FBI]
official and other conspirators are being protected by
the federal government 'in a cover-up to escape its
responsibility for the loss of life in Oklahoma,'
Nichols claims in a Feb. 9 affidavit. Documents that
supposedly help back up his allegations have been sealed
to protect information in them, such as Social Security
numbers and dates of birth. [This is only the excuse for
blacking out large portions of the FOIA documents. What
is being withheld is the identity of all the FBI
officials involved in the cover-up.]

"The affidavit was filed in a lawsuit brought by Salt
Lake City attorney Jesse Trentadue, who believes his
brother's death in a federal prison was linked to the
Oklahoma City bombing. The suit, which seeks documents
from the FBI under the federal Freedom of Information
Act, alleges that authorities mistook Kenneth Trentadue
for a bombing conspirator and that guards killed him in
an interrogation that got out of hand. Trentadue's death
a few months after the April 19, 1995, bombing was ruled
a suicide after several investigations. [Alleging
suicide is a typical way of covering for prison
wrongdoing.]

"In his affidavit, Nichols ... alleges he wrote
then-Attorney General John Ashcroft in 2004, offering to
help identify all parties who played a role in the
bombing but never got a reply. Nichols is serving a life
sentence at the U.S. Penitentiary Administrative Maximum
Facility in Florence, Colo. ... McVeigh and Nichols were
the only defendants indicted in the bombing. However,
Nichols alleges others were involved.

"McVeigh told him he was recruited for undercover
missions while serving in the military, according to
Nichols. He says he learned sometime in 1995 that there
had been a change in bombing target and that McVeigh was
upset by that. 'There, in what I believe was an
accidental slip of the tongue, McVeigh revealed the
identity of a high-ranking FBI official who was
apparently directing McVeigh in the bomb plot,' Nichols
says in the affidavit." [This explains why McVeigh,
branded as a "right-wing" extremist, refused to talk to
any of the right wing people who tried to contact him in
prison hoping to get him to help them find out about
government involvement in the case. There were various
Middle Eastern "John Does" that were seen with McVeigh,
and the FBI kept protecting their identity and refused
to allow the grand jury to pursue them. McVeigh knew he
was working with the government and thought it his great
"patriotic duty" to die for his country rather than blow
the cover on this covert black operation.]

Both the Bush administration and the Utah courts tried
to keep this damning information of Terry Nichols from
becoming public. As Joseph Watson of Infowars.com noted,
"The filing was quickly sealed by a Utah district court,
but not before the Deseret Morning News identified the
accused FBI provocateur as Larry Potts. Trentadue
dropped the bombshell that Attorney General's Ashcroft's
office gagged Nichols from speaking to the media after
it became apparent that McVeigh's accomplices and
government ties to the bombing were in danger of
leaking.

"'Apparently before he had contacted me several years
ago he had written to Attorney General Ashcroft,
volunteering to tell everything about the bombing and
the others involved,' said Trentadue. 'Not only did no
one from Attorney General Ashcroft's office follow up
with Nichols, they actually apparently issued an order
barring him from all contact with the media --it was
thereafter that he reached out to me and I was able to
get in to see him to spend a day and half with him.'"

The agent Nichols refers to is none other than the
notorious Larry Potts, who has been involved in every
major FBI (dark side) provocation of so-called
"right-wing extremists." Potts lead the siege at Ruby
Ridge in 1992, which resulted in the death of Randy
Weaver's wife Vicki. Government and military witnesses
said he was present at the siege of the Branch Davidians
in Waco, Texas that resulted in the burning death of
eighty-one Branch Dividian men, women, and children.
Potts was forced out of the FBI as the scapegoat taking
the blame for giving the order to open fire on innocent
people in the cabin at Ruby Ridge.

But, as is typical, dark side agents never retire. They
have a process called "sheep-dipping" where the
government finds them some type of covering employment
while they still keep working for the covert side of
whatever agency needs them. It is truly a secret club.

According to one informant I interviewed who got invited
to one of this secret club's parties by his FBI handler,
these "black" agents have a special ring they wear at
special inter-service social gatherings (of the odious,
immoral variety), and they brag about being "immune"
from prosecution for their evil acts. They also told him
about secret funding sources they have from drug
shipments sponsored and controlled by the CIA. Only once
did the media got a whiff of these unsavory social
gatherings (called the "Good 'Ol Boys Roundups") in
1990. One of the less corrupt agents attending one of
these secret multi-jurisdiction stag parties (in the
Cherokee National Forest in East Tennessee), alerted a
friend in the press that other agents had put up a
"nigger hanging tree" and made "nigger hunting licenses"
available. Except for the racist angle, the press
wouldn't have otherwise been interested if the agent had
only reported the conspiratorial aspects of this
gathering--which is taboo for mainstream media coverage.

The Tribune continues: "Nichols also says that McVeigh
threatened him and his family to force him to rob Roger
Moore, an Arkansas gun dealer, of weapons and
explosives. He later learned the robbery was staged so
Moore, who was in on the phony heist, could deny any
knowledge of the bombing plot if the stolen items were
traced back to him, Nichols claims. He adds that Moore
allegedly told his attorney that he would not be
prosecuted in connection with the bombing because he was
a 'protected witness.' [What Nichols claims is very
probable. This is a common covert tactic to shift blame
away from those involved.]

"Nichols says McVeigh must have had help building the
bomb. The device he and McVeigh built the day before the
bombing did not resemble the one that ultimately was
used, Nichols says, and 'displayed a level of expertise
and sophistication' that neither man had."

The final bomb was prebuilt by covert agents and
delivered to McVeigh in one of the two Ryder trucks that
were at the team's disposal. I believe the extra truck
was photographed at a nearby military secure yard in
Oklahoma. As Paul Watson says, "In early April 1995 a
Ryder truck identical to the one used in the bombing was
filmed by a pilot during an overflight of an area near
Camp Gruber-Braggs, Oklahoma. A June 17th, 1997,
Washington Post article authenticates the photos as
being exactly what they appear to be, photos of a Ryder
truck in a clandestine base at Camp Gruber-Braggs. Why
was the military in possession of a Ryder truck housed
in a remote clandestine army base days before the Alfred
P. Murrah bombing?" The bomb Nichols helped McVeigh
build was much smaller and was removed from the plot
when the two identical Ryder trucks were switched.

It is my analysis that Nichols was a legitimate right
wing individual and McVeigh was not. Nichols was brought
into the plot in order to help the government cast blame
on the right wing militia movement. The Islamic
militants Nichols was sent to meet with in the
Philippines also turned out to be agent provocateurs.
They were part of the same cell directed by Ramsey
Yousef, who masterminded (on behalf of his US covert
agents) the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. We know
this now because his relationship with the FBI surfaced
during the first WTC bombing trial. These informants
were doing much more than taking notes--they were often
directing the operation and helping to secure the
explosives. Nichols figured this out while in jail and
that's why the gag order. It was only because a court
order for discover breeched the gag order that we have
access to his affidavit today.

=====================

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